Sunday, December 6, 2015

Dan Carlson, Rather Pitch - 3

Carlson, though, wasn't so sure just being there was the best thing for his career, he told The Examiner in 1997.

"I really would rather pitch," Carlson told The Examiner that June. "The major leagues are great. I
want to pitch in the major leagues. But it doesn't do me any good if I
sit on the bench, then pitch badly because I haven't done any work. It
doesn't do me any good and it doesn't do the team any good."

Carlson debuted with the Giants that year June 10. He didn't get another outing for more than two weeks. Carlson ended up getting four more outings through the end of July.

Carlson's career began in 1989, taken by the Giants in the 33rd round, out of Mount Hood Community College in Oregon.

Carlson started with the Giants at short-season Everett, going 2-6 in 17 outings, 11 starts. He made AA Shreveport in 1992, going 15-9 in 27 starts. In 1993, he got his first look at AAA, at Phoenix.

Carlson returned to Phoenix
full time for 1994, then again in 1995 and 1996. Then, in September
1996, Carlson debuted in San Francisco. In five outings with the big
club, Carlson gave up three earned runs in 10 innings of work. He also
picked up a win.

"I've
been a starter all my career in the minors but the little I've played
in the big leagues, they used me in relief," Carlson told The Lakeland Ledger. "It doesn't matter to me what I do. I just want to make the club."

Carlson did make the team, as a reliever. He ended up getting 10 outings through mid-May, giving up 15 earned runs in 17.2 innings. He then played the rest of the year at AAA Durham.

Carlson
then played in just one more major league campaign, in 1999, two
outings with the Diamondbacks. Carlson continued playing in the minors, and briefly in Japan, for two more years, his last in 2001.

"He had a great mind for the game and for his stuff," Carlson told The Arizona Republic of Skaggs' 2011 campaign. "He would evaluate himself each game,
each inning, sometimes realizing it was time to bury a fastball in or
time to use his changeup. Everybody knows he has a great curveball but
those other two pitches are good as well."